![Cole Swindell and Anne Wilson Release 'Still Do' [LISTEN]](https://www.everythingnash.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/cole-swindell-anne-wilson.-zack-dougan.jpg)
Cole Swindell is teaming up with Anne Wilson for a new duet, out now. The two just released “Still Do,” a song that appears on Wilson’s 2025 Stars album. Wilson wrote the song with Trannie Anderson, Jeff Pardo, and Matthew West.
“I wrote it last year at the beach,” Wilson recalls, in a video shared on social media. “Put it out on my new record, Stars, that came out in the fall. And I thought there would be no one better to feature on it than the incredible Cole Swindell. It’s been so cool to get to talk to him about the song and what it means to both of us.
“It’s a special song,” she continues. “Just about the reminder that, no matter what you’ve done, or how far you’ve gone or run away from God, you can come back to Him, because He loves you, and there’s grace for you there.”
Swindell was a fan of the song, even before the two decided to release a version of “Still Do” together.
“The first time I heard it, it hit me right here in the heart, and the best songs do,” Swindell says. “That’s kind of how I felt. I’m not perfect at all, but it’s a song of hope and that we can all turn back and get on the right road.”
Cole Swindell Speaks Out About His Faith
“Stars” says in part, “‘Cause I don’t know where I’m going / And we both know where I’ve been / And if I’m being honest, I’ll probably wind up there again / But I’m bowing my head cause the words in red Are the only thing ringing true / They tеll me there’s a God who lovеs me / God, I hope You still do.”
It’s a song that aligns with where Swindell is right now, with his Christian faith.
“It’s a song that I wish I had written. … And just the phase of life I’m in,” Swindell says. “It just seems like none of this is by accident. I grew up Southern Baptist. Been in church my whole life. Obviously, you lose your way. Songs like this — there’s one thing to have worship songs, that are amazing. But this is like a song of hope for me, and for anybody. I think that you’re not too far gone. And I think that second verse makes me think of my mom.”
Last fall, Swindell released “Make Heaven Crowded,” inspired by the words Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, said after her husband was killed. He later announced that he was making a big career shift, focusing more on his faith than ever before.
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“I’ve literally been praying and praying about just personally, do I still need to do this?” Swindell admits to The Daily Wire. “Should I hang it up, be a dad? And like I said, the song, the reaction, I think it was the Lord telling me, ‘Look, your career is not over, you’re just not going any further without me.’ My wife told me that, and I believe it.”
After “Make Heaven Crowded” went viral, the father of one realized he wanted to do more than just continue to sing country songs.
“It made me look in the mirror. Somebody that’s living like I should be living and spreading the word as a Christian, what I should be doing with the platform that I have,” Swindell explains. “I just think a lot of us are fed up with feeling like we can’t say how we believe. I mean, there’s no harm in that. And like I said, I’m a loving person, I’m not judgmental. I kind of stay out of the way and do my own thing and try to be good to people, and that’s just not good enough anymore. I have to influence other people to be good to people.”
